Garlick v. Mutual Loan & Building Ass'n

129 Ill. App. 402, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 749
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 9, 1906
DocketGen. No. 4,703
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 129 Ill. App. 402 (Garlick v. Mutual Loan & Building Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garlick v. Mutual Loan & Building Ass'n, 129 Ill. App. 402, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 749 (Ill. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Thompson

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case was in this court before, and is reported in 116 Ill. App. 311, where the case is fully stated as it then appeared. It was at that time reversed and remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with said opinion, but the remanding order seems to have omitted the directions then given. Plaintiff in error, upon the case being redocketed in the Circuit Court, abandoned the benefit of those directions by filing an amended bill.

It is assigned for error that the defendant was permitted to introduce in evidence its books of account with plaintiff. Defendant did not offer any books except such as the person who made the entries therein testified were books of original entry, and that the entries were true and correct and made at the time. With this preliminary proof they were properly admitted. They were also competent evidence under the statute. Section 15, Evidence Act; Mandel v. Swan Land Co., 154 Ill. 177; Trainor v. German Savings L. & B. Assn., 102 Ill. App. 604.

It is also assigned for error that the mortgages and the quit-claim deed were each acknowledged before a notary public who was an official in the defendant association. There are no conveyances to any third parties "involved. The act of May 15, 1903 (Hurd’s Stat. 1903, p. 447), has been held to legalize acknowledgments of deeds and mortgages made to corporations when the officer taking the acknowledgment was at the time of taking the same a stockholder in such corporation, and that an instrument so acknowledged would convey dower and homestead interests notwithstanding such acknowledgment was invalid when taken. Maxwell v. Lincoln Building Association, 216 Ill. 85.

It is alleged in the original bill filed by Louis D. Garlick that he and his wife executed and delivered the mortgage of September 15, 1896, and the quitclaim deed of August 31, 1899. In the answer to the cross-bill Garlick and his wife both deny that they executed said instruments and allege that they were obtained from them by fraud. The Circuit Court correctly found from the evidence that they knowingly and understandingly executed these instruments, and there was no error in that finding. Plaintiffs in error assign for error that the Circuit Court should have found the $5,000 mortgage of August 7, 1889, and the $10,000 mortgage of May 11, 1893, usurious. The court found that plaintiff only received $4,100 on the $5,000 loan and “that said loan was made in conformity with the requirement of law,” which means that it was not usurious. The court found that on the $10,-000 loan plaintiff received $8,000, but does not state whether the loan was legal or illegal, usurious or otherwise. The court then found that the $11,600 loan of September 15, 1896, was made and included all indebtedness of plaintiff to defendant at that.time, and that plaintiff failed in making the agreed payments, and that on August 31, 1899, when the quit-claim deed was made and a contract given to reeonvey on the payment of $10,000 by the Qarlicks, they only owed $7,650 to defendant, and that from that time interest be computed at the legal rate. There is no statement in the decree showing what finding the court made upon the charge of usury in the mortgage of May 11, 1893. We are of the opinion from the amount found due by the court on August 31, 1889, that it was intended to declare that loan usurious. A finding on that question shoiild have been incorporated in the decree, so that there would be no.doubt as to what the court did decree upon the subject. .

Both the original bill and the cross-bill prayed for an accounting. The accounts are very long and complicated, running over fifteen years, with monthly payments of interest, and, at times, of principal and interest, with a controversy over the amounts and dates of payment. To determine how much was due it was necessary for some one to make many complicated computations of interest, because of the frequent partial payments. No such computation appears in this record. The court, after it had entered a decree determining the legal questions involved and the basis of liability, should have sent this cause to the master with directions to state the account, and then upon the statement of such account by the master either party could have objected to such account and pointed out in what items it was claimed there was error. As the ease now stands, the entire calculation must be performed by the Appellate Court to see if the amount finally arrived at in the decree is correct, before we can affirm it. After the evidence was substantially all heard by the chancellor, he announced that he would enter an order referring the case to the master, and thereupon the following stipulations were made in open court:

“It is stipulated by and between the parties to this case, by their respective attorneys, that the itemized statements of the $700 loan, the $5,000 loan ,the $10,-000 loan, the -$11,600 loan, and the transactions under the contract for a deed, are true and correct copies of the books of defendant association with reference to said transaction, and that no objection is made to said statements on account of the same not being the books of original entry; and that only the specific items represented in the receipts showing payments made by Mr. G-arlick which it is claimed have not been accounted for by the association shall be added thereto, and that these statements and receipts shall be submitted to the court for his decision.”

This was followed by seven pages of tabulated matter, showing many entries of payments of principal, interest, dues and fines. This was not a stipulation that the account should be stated by the court and not by the master, though it seems to have been so understood by the court and may have been so intended by counsel; but even if the stipulation had been that the account should not be stated by the master, and the court had been willing to take upon itself that labor, still the rule as laid down in Moss v. McCall, 75 Ill. 190, is that, ‘ ‘ Counsel will not be permitted, by stipulation or otherwise, for their own convenience to impose upon an appellate court the performance of duties that pertain to the office of master in chancery. Where accounts involve large sums of money, and the testimony as to the rights of the parties is conflicting and unsatisfactory, in conformity with the rules of chancery practice the cause must be referred to a master to render a concise and accurate statement so that the same may be readily comprehended, and any objection taken passed upon understandingly. ’ ’ Moshier v. Norton, 83 Ill. 519; French v. Gibbs, 105 Ill. 523; Daily v. Catholic Church, 97 Ill. 19; Beale v. Beale, 116 Ill. 292; Ennesser v. Hudek, 169 Ill. 494. The seven pages of statements from the books of the association, admitted under said stipulation, contained nearly three hundred and fifty items of payments of principal, interest, dues and fines, made on many different dates. There was also proof of other payments not shown upon said statements. The payments made upon the $5,000 loan before the consolidation must be applied pursuant to the statute governing such bodies and the by-laws of the association. Those made upon the $10,000 loan before the consolidation, and those made upon the entire loan as consolidated, must be treated as payments made upon an usurious loan where the debtor is liable for statutory interest.

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129 Ill. App. 402, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garlick-v-mutual-loan-building-assn-illappct-1906.